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New laws permitting organ donation in the UAE have already saved the lives of 37 people, officials say.

Doctors said recent changes to legislation had allowed lifesaving transplants to save patients who previously would have died.

Those saved received organs from only 10 deceased donors.

Changes to the law came into effect early last year, although the introduction of a donor card scheme has yet to be implemented.

As for live donors of organs such as kidneys, Dr Ali Al Obaidli, chief academic officer of Seha, said they were giving the “gift of life”.

“It is the most selfless, kindest, most noble act anyone could do for another person,” said Dr Al Obaidli, also head of the National Organ donation and Transplant Committee.

“We’ve seen sons and daughters donate their organs to their parents and siblings to each other.

“But we’d like to see more people consent to deceased organ donations.”

The subject of organ donations has long been a controversial subject but performing transplants with the organs of deceased donors was legalised in the UAE in 1993.

An issue over the legal definition of death, however, meant transplants were restricted to organs taken from living donors and usually involved kidney operations.

A breakthrough came in March last year when authorities agreed to a legislation framework that allowed transplants from deceased donors.

Today, there are about 6,000 people with primary organ failure, about 4,000 of whom may need kidney transplants.

The remaining 2,000, if they hit end-of-stage organ failure, would have no option other than organs from deceased donors, said Anan Purushothaman, Sheikh Khalifa Medical City’s transplant co-ordinator.

Since the introduction of the legislation in the UAE last year, almost 75 families whose loved ones died in hospital have been approached and asked if they were willing to agree to a transplant.

Of those, only 20 accepted, of which only 10 were deemed to have organs in a sufficiently healthy state to be suitable for transplant.